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Gnome
on the range endears himself to la jefa;
pile of style hairdo banned by royal decree in 1699
By
Woncha Telmé Moore
Gnome,
gnome on the range. This big-hearted little wrangler
has endeared himself to la jefa of the big spread in
a nearby county. His talents are many, and we hear he
can yodel the dogies home.
Mr. Slick from the Crescent City has made quite an impression
on the female patrons of ye olde neighbourhood grille.
Me oh my oh, son of a gun, he's having fun on the bayou.
Conquista-Dora. Ever one for new conquests, this deb
has not taken very well to the sobre nombre Belladona,
the deadly nightshade.
Don't change horses in midstream. This adage, possibly
suggested to Abraham Lincoln by an old Dutch farmer,
is well applicable to the plight of Rickie Richazo who
has been left by his companion of many years for a younger,
more vigorous version of himself -- in fact, his younger
cousin. Love hurts.
There's little apostolic about this doubting Thomas
who can't seem to understand that his family is solidly
behind the new changes and revelations in his life,
all of them.
Fontange or what? Manita, we thought the big pile-of-style
hairdo was reserved for debs and debs alone on that
one big night. When I spotted this matronette at luncheon,
I saw feathers, bows, and a large assortment of shiny
ornaments in a gummed linen band. I thought the style
was abolished for daylight by royal decree in France
in 1699.
You could see the words frozen in air in the clubhouse
locker, suspended and with frosty outlines, as the girlfriend
from la casa chica said exactly the wrong thing in earshot
of the wife. Como dijo the Greek dramatist Antiphanes
de los pleitos del Plato, "As the cold of certain
cities is so intense that it freezes the very words
we utter, which remain congealed till the heat of summer
thaws them, so the mind of youth is so thoughtless that
the wisdom of Plato lies there frozen, as it were, till
it is thawed by the refined judgement of mature age."
This Johnnycake (aka New England corn pone), though
long-lasting, has turned out to be something rather
flavorless that our traveling companions do not wish
to pack into their saddlebags.
A neverending visitation of kith and kin keeps these
newlyweds a little bit on edge.
The Lorelei of north Laredo, with her strange and distinct
echoes filtered through tobacco smoke and branchwater,
is a siren whose song lures the unaware to the dangers
of heretofore uncharted love.
These old friends have been at odds, of all things,
over the Mayflower Compact -- not the contract that
was the rude beginning of American democracy, but the
little jeweled and mirrored powder box that one says
the other stole from her vanity.
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